Part 18
By Hijaz Tamim
ISIS’s Revenue from Ransom Payments
Over the past two decades, as ISIS extended its reach across the Middle East, a disturbing pattern took shape: the systematic kidnapping of European nationals in war-ravaged regions such as Syria and Iraq. These abductions were not simply tragic consequences of conflict. They became a calculated and highly effective pillar of the group’s financial strategy. Ransom payments turned into a steady stream of income worth millions, fueling ISIS’s military operations, the purchase of weapons and equipment, and its broad propaganda network.
In the early years of ISIS’s emergence, foreign workers engaged in humanitarian aid, healthcare, and journalism were often singled out. The group deliberately chose individuals whose capture would generate strong public pressure and political concern in their home countries, ensuring maximum leverage for financial gain. Since 2008, France alone is believed to have paid at least $40 million in ransom. Switzerland contributed an estimated $12.4 million, Spain about $5.9 million, and Austria roughly $3.2 million to free their citizens.
One of the most notable examples was the release of four French journalists who had been held for nearly ten months. Although the French government publicly denied paying ransom, German reports later revealed that approximately $18 million had been transferred to Turkey by the French Ministry of Defense for delivery to the kidnappers. The case illustrated an uncomfortable truth: in many instances, governments quietly find ways to pay ransoms, even as they publicly condemn the practice, aware that such payments ultimately sustain the machinery of terrorism.
Italy faced similar predicaments. Between 2013 and 2014, Swiss-Italian aid worker Federico Motka was seized by ISIS, and reports indicate that around $7 million was paid for his freedom. In another case, Italian humanitarian workers Vanessa Marzullo and Greta Ramelli, kidnapped in Syria, were released after the Italian government allegedly paid €12 million to secure their return.
These incidents placed European governments in a difficult moral and strategic bind. To refuse ransom payments is to risk the lives of citizens; to comply is to finance terrorism and encourage further kidnappings. The United States and the United Kingdom have upheld strict policies against ransom payments, while some European states, quietly or openly, have taken the opposite path. This divide has played a central role in strengthening ISIS’s financial infrastructure.
The issue sits at the crossroads of security, law, politics, and ethics, continuing to provoke debate among international bodies, human rights advocates, and counterterrorism experts. Each nation’s response reflects its political priorities, international obligations, and domestic pressures, underscoring the absence of a unified global approach.
Ultimately, the money ISIS extracted through ransom payments did more than bankroll its armed campaigns. It exposed deep fractures in international policy and created a lingering challenge for global security and diplomacy, one that the world has yet to resolve.